As he came into the high-road, people passed him in carioles and sleighs. Some eyed him curiously. What did he mean to do? What object had he in coming to the village? What did he expect? As he entered the village his pace slackened. He had no destination, no object. He was simply aware that his new life was beginning.
He passed a little house on which was a sign, “Narcisse Dauphin, Notary.” It gave him a curious feeling. It was the old life before him. “Charles Mallard, Notary?”—No, that was not for him. Everything that reminded him of the past, that brought him in touch with it, must be set aside. He moved on. Should he go to the Cure? No; one thing at a time, and today he wanted his thoughts for himself. More people passed him, and spoke of him to each other, though there was no coarse curiosity—the habitant has manners.
Presently he passed a low shop with a divided door. The lower half was closed, the upper open, and the winter sun was shining full into the room, where a bright fire burned.
Charley looked up. Over the door was painted, in straggling letters: “Louis Trudel, Tailor.” He looked inside. There, on a low table, bent over his work, with a needle in his hand, sat Louis Trudel the tailor. Hearing footsteps, feeling a shadow, he looked up. Charley started at the look of the shrunken, yellow face; for if ever death had set his seal, it was on that haggard parchment. The tailor’s yellow eyes ran from Charley’s face to his clothes.
“I knew they’d fit,” he said, with a snarl. “Drove me hard, too!”
Charley had an inspiration. He opened the halfdoor, and entered.
“Do you want help?” he said, fixing his eyes on the tailor’s, steady and persistent.
“What’s the good of wanting—I can’t get it,” was the irritable reply, as he uncrossed his legs.
Charley took the iron out of his hand. “I’ll press, if you’ll show me how,” he said.
“I don’t want a fiddling ten-minutes’ help like that.”